The Lexus RX has been the brand’s top-selling vehicle in the U.S. for quite some time. It got its start at a soft and cushy grocery getter, but over the years has become a much more enjoyable vehicle to drive, while still maintaining its luxurious styling and amenities.

Do you like your Mustangs fast? What you’re looking at is a custom-built Mustang with an electric drivetrain that makes more than 900 horsepower and 1000 lb-ft. of torque. Is that enough for you?
Built in collaboration between Ford and power and thermal management company Webasto, the electrified pony car looks much like other tricked-out Mustangs, with a lowered stance, 20″ staggered wheels, and carbon fiber body parts.

When it comes to cars, there’s fast, then there’s FAST… and then there’s REALLY REALLY FAST. While cars with regular internal combustion engines or electric motors have only recently knocked on the door of 300mph, jet- and rocket-powered vehicles can go quite a bit faster.

This super shiny custom vehicle was inspired by vintage salt flat racers, with a healthy dose of retro aviation style. If its pointy chrome body looks familiar, that’s because it was made from the aluminum wing tip fuel tank of a 1950s Lockheed Super Constellation airplane.

Ford has made no bones about telling us there’s a new Bronco on the way, and has been dropping hints about its boxy looks for a couple of years now. It’s going to be Spring 2020 before we get our first real look at the production version of the 4×4, but Ford Performance is giving us what might be the best idea of what the truck will look like with its Bronco R Baja truck.
Rocking a squared-off, elongated shell, the Bronco R looks badass.

I suppose if you’re going to tow a trailer with a sports car, it shouldn’t be an ordinary box on wheels. What you’re looking at is a crazy custom-built trailer that looks just like the car that’s towing it.

If Sean Spicer, former United States Press Secretary and Dancing with the Stars contestant drove the 2020 Shelby GT500 Mustang, he’d declare it the “best Mustang ever produced. Period.” He’d be right. The latest Mustang to carry the late Carroll Shelby’s name on it is the best Mustang Ford has ever produced, pulling off the daily driving duties while still being able to rip your face off on the track.

Do you love the classic Volkswagen Beetle? While its original internal combustion engine left a whole lot to be desired, the idea of a bug with a torque-y electric motor sounds like it could be lots of fun.

British ultra-luxury automaker Bentley is back with the latest edition of its flagship executive sedan, the perfectly-posh Flying Spur. For 2020, the Flying Spur is powered a monster 6.0-liter W12 engine that produces 626 horsepower, and can launch the gargantuan sedan to a mindblowing top speed of 207 mph.

I’m already a very big fan of the Hyundai Veloster N. With prices starting below $30,000 for the 275hp model, I think it represents the best performance bang for the buck of any new car you can buy today.

You’d think that car companies had been crash testing vehicles since the dawn of cars. But the idea didn’t come along until the 1930s, when General Motors conducted the first known crash tests. Other automakers would gradually follow.

Let’s take a trip back to the 1950s, a time when aviation was on the rise, and rocket ships were the future. This set the perfect stage for the design of sleek and streamlined vehicles, some of which looked like they could launch into space.

Ford has been teasing us for quite some time that it was working on a crossover SUV that gets its inspiration from the Mustang. Now we finally know when it will be revealed to the public, with the vehicle breaking cover on November 17.

A massive typhoon had just blanketed the majority of Japan in torrential rain, and shortly after letting-up, my wife tells me that we were going shopping. Unsure as to whether anything would be open I opted to tag along, secretly hoping to discover another interesting Japanese automobile.